Womack v. State
Womack v. State
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Womack has appealed in error from a judgment •of conviction of the offense of breaking into a business house with intent to commit larceny.
In the first of these cases, the indictment was for housebreaking “with intent to commit a felony,” with■out specifying the felony, and was held bad. In -the second case, the charge was that defendant broke into a storehouse for the purpose of committing a larceny, and then and there, unlawfully and feloni-ously, did take, steal and carry away, etc., and the court held that the charge of the commission of larceny, the offense being described in apt words, was -equivalent to a charge of the intent to commit that felony. It was said, however, that the words “for the purpose of committing a larceny,” or, “with intent to commit a larceny,” would not be sufficient, ■but the offense ought to be described by stating the •facts necessary to constitute it. The descriptive words in the present indictment are, “with the intent to
The defendant was indicted in 1877, and the cause continued until the January term, 1880, when a nolle prosequi was entered and a new indictment found. After the finding of the new indictment, the cause was continued by the defendant until the next term. When the cause was called for trial at the next term, .the defendant again moved for a continuance, upon his own affidavit that he could not go safely to trial for want of the evidence of I. B. Hill. He expected to prove by Hill that he had conducted the examination of the witnesses before the committing magis'rate, and that the two witnesses for the State, Towles and Blackwell, by whom the identity of the defendant as the guilty party would be established, had sworn on that occasion that they at first thought that the per
After the panel had been made up, but before any ■of the jurors were drawn, the defendant proved by the clerk of the court that he had examined the files' • of papers where the deposition of Hill ought to be, but could not find it; that he had not searched his entire office, and could not say that the deposition was lost. The attorney-general then agreed that the -contents of the deposition might be supplied or proved,
The house broken into was a country store. The entry, was effected by first opening a cellar door on-the outside of the building, and then, from the cellar, breaking the lock of a scuttle in the floor, and en-, tering by the scuttle hole. It was noticed that the-lock on the cellar door had been tampered with, and Oliver Towles and Boyd Blackwell were watching in. the store on the night of the breaking. Blackwell had been examined before the committing magistrate,, but was absent in Texas at the time of the trial.. Towles was examined as a witness on the trial, and proved the entrance of some one into the cellar with, a candle, the light of which he could see through the-cracks of the floor, the breaking of the lock of the. scuttle door, the opening of the hole, and the entry through it of the person with the lighted candle. He described this person as thrusting his head through, the hole, then crawling into the store on his knees, and then straightening up on his feet, placing the-candle on the counter before him, and looking around. The witness says he was lying on the counter about twelve feet from him, saw him distinctly, and knew-him to be the defendant. • Blackwell, he says, was. lying behind him on a pallet. Witness had armed himself with an iron weight, which he threw at the housebreaker. The latter put out the light, jumped through the scuttle hole and escaped.
On cross-examination by the defendant’s counsel^.
Upon the hearing of his motion for a new trial, the defendant filed another affidavit, in which, after referring to his affidavits for a continuance, he stated that he could prove by one of the witnesses mentioned in his additional affidavit for the continuance, who lived in Texas, that the State’s witness, Towles, had admitted in conversation, on the morning after the house-breaking, that at first he thought the person was Frank White, then that it was Jeff Lusk, and lastly, upon reflection, that it was defendant. The defendant further stated in his affidavit that he could prove, by one Levisa Lawson, the making by the
Upon the facts thus disclosed by the record, the defendant asks this court to give him a new trial.
It has long been the settled rule of this court not to interfere with the discretionary action of the trial court in the matter of continuances, except in a clear case of the abuse of the discretion: Rhea v. State, 10 Yer., 258; Goodman v. State, Meigs, 195; Nelson v. State, 2 Swan, 482; Sevier v. State, Thomp. Cas., 192; Garber v. State, 4 Cold., 161. It is also settled, that if a continuance be refused upon an affidavit alleging sufficient grounds, but upon the trial it is made to appear that the affidavit was false, this court will not reverse: Porter v. State, 3 Lea, 496.
At the January term, 1880, when the present indictment was found, there was technically a new case, but in reality the same case which had been previously pending. 'This fact only appears by a recital of the trial judge entered on the minutes, and ought
The additional affidavit offered upon the application for a continuance was, perhaps, properly rejected for the reason given by the trial judge: State v. Evans, 1 Tenn., 211. It was clearly insufficient, because it failed to disclose the facts to be proved. The application rested, therefore, upon the defendant’s affidavit of what he expected to prove by Hill. The affidavit is so worded as to leave it doubtful whether Hill was a resident of Texas or of this State. If of the former, the defendant was guilty of negligence in not obtaining an order at the first term to take his deposition.
If, however, we could see that defendant was seriously prejudiced by the absence of the testimony, the application for a new trial might deserve more favor. But it appears from the direct evidence, and from the failure on the trial to develop the defense shadowed in the affidavits, either by the introduction of witnesses who were present at the examination before the committing magistrate, or by cross-questioning the witness himself, that the defense had no real foundation as to the witness Towles. For the same reason, the-proposed evidence brought forward on the application for a new trial below is without merit, as well as inadmissible for the reasons given by the circuit judge. The defendant’s counsel has called attention to some-objections to evidence made on the trial, but without pointing out any error in the rulings upon them, and we have not discovered any.
Affirm the judgment. '
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William Womack v. State
- Status
- Published